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Quick Summary
A six-figure-earning millennial sparked debate on Reddit after admitting they struggle to build meaningful savings despite contributing to retirement accounts and keeping spending in check.
With costs compressing even strong incomes, many high earners benefit from connecting with vetted financial advisors through services like SmartAsset.
Others trying to build financial margin are diversifying into hands-off real estate through platforms like Arrived, which allows investors to earn rental income starting at $100.
A millennial earning six figures posed a question on Reddit that spiraled into a broader argument about money, responsibility, and what financial stability actually looks like in 2026.
“I don’t understand how people have money,” the user wrote in a post, describing frustration at being unable to build savings despite earning an above average income, contributing to a 401(k), and avoiding obvious excess. The poster said their liquid savings rarely exceed $10,000 after routine expenses, including housing costs, car payments, healthcare, pet care, and maintenance costs that arrive without warning.
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The post struck a nerve because it challenged a familiar assumption. If someone with a strong income feels stuck, what does that say about everyone else.
The Reddit user clarified that they were not claiming to be poor. Instead, they questioned how people manage to build the kind of financial buffer described as responsible adulthood. That includes six months of emergency savings, a meaningful down payment for a home, and money left over to invest.
Their conclusion after hundreds of responses was that most people who have that kind of money did not arrive there through income alone.
To have real money, they said it “requires one or preferably, more than one of the following.”
That list included family help with education or housing. Avoiding student loans entirely. Landing a stable job early and holding onto it through downturns. Exceptionally high paying careers. Extreme frugality. Or partnering with someone who earns and saves at a similar level.
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“The real question,” the poster wrote later, is “how more average people do it. The answer appears to be that they don’t.”
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